Skip to content
Spring Clearout Β· Up to 70% off β†’
Spring Clearout Β· Up to 70% off β†’

Angel Delight Raspberry - 600g

Sold out
Original price $15.99 - Original price $15.99
Original price
$15.99
$15.99 - $15.99
Current price $15.99
Availability:
Out of stock
Rated 4.9/5 from 436 reviews
 
Secure Checkout Safe & trusted payments
Shipped from Canada Fast & reliable delivery
Authentic British Foods Imported from the UK
Rated 4.9/5 From 436 reviews
About Angel Delight Raspberry

About Angel Delight Raspberry

Angel Delight Raspberry is one of those British desserts that does not require much explanation to anyone who grew up in the UK. You add milk, you whisk, you wait, and somehow a bowl of pink fluff appears that tastes exactly the way you remember it. It is not complicated, and that is entirely the point.

This is the Birds Angel Delight Raspberry in the 600g catering-size format, imported from the United Kingdom. The powder whisks up into a light, mousse-like dessert with that familiar raspberry flavour that has been a fixture in British kitchens for decades. The larger pack size makes it useful if you are feeding a crowd, stocking a cupboard, or simply making sure you do not run out any time soon.

For British expats in Canada, Angel Delight sits in a very particular category of things that are harder to explain than they are to just eat. The Great British Shop stocks the UK version here in Canada, so there is no need to wait on a parcel from home or hope a visiting relative has packed it alongside the tea bags.

The Raspberry flavour is one of the classics in the Angel Delight range alongside Strawberry, Butterscotch and others, and the Birds name behind it has been a staple of British baking and dessert-making for well over a century. If you are buying it for the first time, the instructions are on the pack. If you are buying it again, you already know what to do.

Shop more Birds in Canada or browse the wider range of British pantry favourites available to order across Canada.

Frequently asked questions about Angel Delight Raspberry

Q: What does Angel Delight Raspberry taste like?

A: Angel Delight Raspberry is a light, mousse-like whip with a fruity raspberry flavour. It is refreshing rather than heavy, which is part of why it became such a fixture at British teatimes and school dinners. You just whisk it with cold milk and it sets into something airy and sweet that is difficult to take seriously and equally difficult to stop eating.

Q: Is Angel Delight Raspberry the same UK version sold in Britain?

A: Yes, this is the Birds Angel Delight Raspberry imported from the United Kingdom, not a reformulated or locally produced version. The 600g catering-size tub is the same product that has been a British kitchen staple for decades. For anyone who grew up making it in a bowl with a hand whisk and far too much enthusiasm, that distinction matters more than it probably should.

Q: How do you make Angel Delight Raspberry?

A: Angel Delight Raspberry is straightforward to prepare: you whisk the powder with cold milk and leave it to set for a few minutes until it thickens into a light, airy dessert. The 600g pack is a larger catering-size format, so it is well suited to making multiple portions at once, whether for a family pudding, a gathering, or simply because one bowl was never going to be enough.

Additional Information

Packaging Accuracy. We keep product information as accurate and up to date as possible. Manufacturers sometimes change packaging, ingredients, nutritional information, allergen advice, pack sizes or branding without notice, so the product you receive may look slightly different from the images shown. If you have a question about ingredients or allergens before ordering, please get in touch and we will gladly check for you.

Customers also add

Based on baskets that include this product.

Featured Collection

Shop our most popular products

A handy shortcut to the British favourites flying out the door.

View most popular
Shop our most popular products

Real customers, real British hauls

Loved by thousands of Canadians coast to coast.

What our customers say

4.9 from 436 Google Reviews
Love the food takes me back to home I live in Alberta the food has been sent to me very fast
And the one thing I really like is the personal card that comes with my food
Read all reviews β€Ί

Great British Hauls

Across Canada, one box at a time πŸ‡¬πŸ‡§

St. Johns, NL
St. Johns, NLMay 2026
Oshawa, ON
Oshawa, ONMay 2026
Toronto, ON
Toronto, ONMay 2026
Charlottetown, PE
Charlottetown, PEMay 2026
Amherstburg, ON
Amherstburg, ONMay 2026
See more hauls β€Ί

The story of Angel Delight Raspberry

A pink pudding with a long cupboard memory

Angel Delight Raspberry is not the sort of thing people remember in a calm, sensible way. It belongs to the category of British puddings that can turn otherwise normal adults into people discussing tea-time in 1978 with alarming sincerity. Whisked with milk, left to thicken, and served in bowls that were never quite large enough, it has the look and feel of a pudding made for school nights, Saturday tea, and households where dessert did not need to explain itself. For British shoppers in Canada, the raspberry version carries that particular sharp, fruity brightness that says instant pudding, kitchen table, and someone definitely licking the whisk.

Read the full story

The Bird’s background, without pretending this began in raspberry

There is not enough supplied product-level history here to claim a neat origin story for Angel Delight Raspberry itself, so the honest route is to look at the Bird’s family behind the packet. By 1843, Alfred Bird’s company was producing baking powder, and by 1844 it was promoting custard powder nationally. Alfred Bird also invented a baking powder in 1843, reportedly to make yeast-free bread for his wife Elizabeth, who had allergies to eggs and yeast. By 1895, the company was producing blancmange powder, jelly powder, and egg substitute as well. That matters because Bird’s was not simply a custard name. It became part of a much wider British tradition of powdered puddings and practical pantry chemistry, which is exactly the family Angel Delight sits in, even if its own raspberry chapter is not fully documented here.

Alfred Bird and the useful sort of invention

The older Bird’s story begins in Birmingham in 1837, when Alfred Bird, a trained chemist and druggist, worked from his shop on Bull Street. His best-known invention was egg-free custard powder, created because Elizabeth could not eat ordinary egg custard. Bird used cornflour in place of egg, producing a custard-style pudding that solved a household problem before it became a commercial one. That is a very British sort of food origin story, really: not grand romance, not a banquet, just someone trying to make pudding possible without causing domestic trouble. After guests responded well to the egg-free custard, Bird put it into wider production, and Alfred Bird and Sons Ltd grew from there.

Birmingham, custard, and the powdered pudding habit

Birmingham gives the Bird’s story some useful grit. This was a city of industry, invention, workshops, commerce, and people turning clever ideas into things that could be made, sold, and used. A chemist making food powders fits that world rather neatly. Bird’s later factory in Digbeth became part of the city’s food landscape, and when production moved to Banbury in 1964, the former Gibb Street factory eventually found a second life as the Custard Factory arts centre. Corporate history likes to polish these stories until everything looks inevitable, but the real charm is messier: a practical invention, a Midlands business, a pudding powder that became so embedded in British kitchens that for many people β€œcustard” simply meant the Bird’s style version.

Where Angel Delight fits in the cupboard

Angel Delight Raspberry belongs to that same British confidence in packet puddings. It is not custard powder, and it should not be dressed up as Victorian Birmingham history. Still, it sits comfortably in the Bird’s line of puddings that rely on a little kitchen transformation: powder into pudding, milk into something spoonable, a few minutes of whisking into a bowl everyone recognises. There is something wonderfully unfussy about that. It does not ask for pastry skills, a water bath, or a calm relationship with gelatine. It asks for milk, a bowl, and someone willing to stand there whisking until it looks right. In many British homes, that was enough ceremony.

Why it still travels well

For expats, Angel Delight Raspberry is often less about pudding as a category and more about the exact memory of it. It is the colour, the light whipped texture, the way it showed up after fish fingers, shepherd’s pie, or whatever had been declared dinner. In Canada, where familiar British groceries can feel oddly specific and strangely important, a packet like this can do a lot of emotional work for something so light. It is the sort of thing that might arrive in a parcel from family, sit in a pantry beside tea bags and gravy granules, and make perfect sense on a wet Halifax evening. A quiet nod, then, from The Great British Shop to the British habit of missing pudding powders more than anyone expected.